
The New Education / A Review of Progressive Educational Movements of the Day (1915)
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About This Book
Best known for his paean to self-sufficiency, Living the Good Life , which became a bestseller that Newsweek called "an underground bible for the city-weary," Scott Nearing was also a high-profile public advocate for education reform at the start of the Progressive era. Lamenting that public schools had failed to keep up with societal changes, Nearing traveled the country during the early decades of the twentieth century, documenting schools that had abandoned a traditional authoritarian stance in favor of child-centered practice. Now the vignettes, interviews, and speculations on school restr...
Chapters (417)
- The New Education
- A REVIEW OF PROGRESSIVE EDUCATIONAL MOVEMENTS OF THE DAY BY
- SCOTT NEARING, Ph.D.
- AUTHOR OF “SOCIAL ADJUSTMENT,” “THE SUPER RACE,” “WAGES IN THE UNITED STATES,” “SOCIAL SANITY,” “REDUCING THE COST OF LIVING,” etc.
- PREFACE
- CONTENTS
- THE NEW EDUCATION
- INTRODUCTION
- THE OLD EDUCATION
- I The Critical Spirit and the Schools
- II Some Harsh Words from the Inside
- III A Word from Huxley and Spencer
- IV Some Honest Facts
- V Have We Fulfilled the Object of Education?
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER I
- THE NEW BASIS FOR EDUCATION[16]
- I Can There Be a New Basis?
- II Social Change
- III Keeping Up with the Times
- IV Education in the Early Home
- V City Life and the New Basis for Education
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER II
- TEACHING BOYS AND GIRLS
- I The New School Machinery
- II Rousseau Versus a Class of Forty
- III The Fallacious “Average”
- IV The Five Ages of Childhood
- V Age Distribution in One Grade
- VI Shall Child or Subject Matter Come First?
- VII The Vicious Practices of One “Good” School
- VIII Boys and Girls—The One Object of Educational Activity
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER III
- FITTING SCHOOLS TO CHILDREN
- I Child Growth—A Primary Factor in Child Life
- II Children Need Health First
- III Play as a Means to Growth
- IV Some Things Which a Child Must Learn
- V What Schools Must Provide to Meet Child Needs
- VI The Educational Work of the Small Town
- VII The Educational Problems of an Industrial Community
- VIII Beginning with Child Needs
- CHAPTER IV
- PROGRESSIVE NOTES IN ELEMENTARY EDUCATION
- I The Kindergarten
- II Translating the Three R’s
- III Playing at Mathematics
- IV A Model English Lesson
- VI The Crow and the Scarecrow
- VII School and Home
- VIII Breaking New Ground
- IX The School and the Community
- X New Keys for Old Locks
- XI School and Shop
- XII Half a Chance to Study
- XIII Thwarting Satan in the Summer Time
- XIV Sending the Whole Child to School
- XV Smashing the School Machine
- XVI All Hands Around for An Elementary School
- XVII From a Blazed Trail to a Paved Highway
- CHAPTER V
- KEEPING THE HIGH SCHOOL IN STEP WITH LIFE
- I The Responsibility of the High School
- II An Experiment in Futures
- III The Success Habit
- IV The Help-Out Spirit
- V Joining Hands with the Elementary Schools
- VI The Abolition of “Mass Play”
- VII Experimental Democracy
- VIII Breaching the Chinese Wall of High School Classicism
- IX An Up-to-Date High School
- X From School to Shop and Back Again
- XI Fitting the High School Graduate Into Life
- XII The High School as a Public Servant
- CHAPTER VI
- HIGHER EDUCATION AT LOWVILLE[20]
- I Lowville and the Neighborhood
- II Lowville Academy
- III The School’s Opportunity
- IV Field Work as Education
- V Real Domestic Science
- VI One Instance of Success
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER VII
- A GREAT CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM[21]
- I “Co-operation” and “Progressivism"
- II An Educational Creed
- III Vitalizing the Kindergarten
- IV Regenerating the Grades
- V Popularizing High School Education
- VI A City University
- VII Special Schools for Special Classes
- VIII Special Schools for Special Children
- IX Playground and Summer Schools
- X Mr. Dyer and the Men Who Stood With Him
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER VIII
- THE OYLER SCHOOL OF CINCINNATI
- I An Experiment in Social Education
- II An Appeal for Applied Education
- III Solving a Local Problem
- IV Domestic Science Which Domesticates
- V Making Commercial Products in the Grades
- VI A Real Interest in School
- VII The Mothers’ Club
- VIII The Disappearance of “Discipline"
- IX The Spirit of Oyler
- CHAPTER IX
- VITALIZING RURAL EDUCATION
- I The Call of the Country
- II Making Bricks with Straw
- III Making the One-Room Country School Worth While
- IV Repainting the Little Red Schoolhouse
- V A Fairyland of Rural Education
- VI The Task of the Country School
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER X
- OUT OF THE MOUTHS OF BABES AND SUCKLINGS
- I Miss Belle
- II Going to Work Through the Children
- III Beginning on Muffins
- IV Taking the Boys in Hand
- V “Busy Work” as an Asset
- VI Marguerite
- VII Winning Over the Families
- CHAPTER XI
- WIDE-AWAKE SLEEPY EYE
- I Fitting Schools to Needs
- II Getting the Janitor in Line
- III The Department of Agriculture
- IV A Short Course for Busy People
- V Letting the Boys Do It
- VI A Look at the Domestic Science
- VII How It Works Out
- VIII Theoretical and Practical
- CHAPTER XII
- THE SOUTH FOR THE NEW EDUCATION
- I A Dream of Empire
- II Finding the Way
- III Jem’s Father
- IV Club Life Militant
- V Canning Clubs
- VI Recognition Day for Boys and Girls
- VII Teaching Grown-Ups to Read
- VIII George Washington, Junior
- IX A Step Toward Good Health
- X Theory and Practice[28]
- XI A People Coming to Its Own
- FOOTNOTES:
- CHAPTER XIII THE SPIRIT OF THE NEW EDUCATION
- I The Standard of Education
- II Standardization Was a Failure
- III Education as Growth
- IV Child Needs and Community Needs
- V The Final Test of Education
- INDEX
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